After serving his adopted country, a Filipino-American
war hero's fondest wish was to be buried in Arlington National Cemetery.

But Augusto Roa Realuyo died in a Manhattan
Veterans Affairs hospital last month at age 82 without the Army consenting
to his request for a place at the nation's premier military cemetery.

Yesterday, Realuyo's family asked a Manhattan
Federal Court to direct the Army to do so, citing his two tours of duty
during World War II, his capture and internment by the Japanese and his
participation in the infamous Bataan Death March.

"It is very distressing, but I had to do it,"
Realuyo's brother, Pompeo, 69, a lawyer, said of the lawsuit.

A law signed by then-President Bill Clinton
in 2000 grants Filipino-Americans who served in World War II burial rights
in national cemeteries, such as one in Pinelawn, Long Island, run by the
Department of Veterans Affairs.

Arlington - home to the Tomb of the Unknowns
and the graves of President John F. Kennedy and thousands of vets from
the Civil War to Desert Storm - is administered by the Army.

And Army officials say Realuyo is not eligible.

So while the issue of his burial site remains
contested, Realuyo's body remains at a Greenwich Village funeral home.

"He only talked of being buried in Arlington,"
his brother explained. "He would walk through the cemetery and point out
names and platoons" of soldiers who went through the Bataan Death March.

According to military records, Realuyo was
a lieutenant in the Filipino Army until General Douglas MacArthur conscripted
him into the U.S. Army in the weeks before Pearl Harbor. Captured by Japanese
soldiers on April 9, 1942, he was sent home August 4, 1942, his health
in ruins.

"I could not recognize him. He was all bones,"
said Pompeo, who was 8 years old at the time.

Realuyo returned to service in 1944 and was
discharged honorably after the war.

He came to the U.S. in 1946, became an architect
and raised three children. When the Philippines became an independent nation
in 1946, a law took effect stripping Filipino-American POWs of their status
as American war vets - unless they were still in the U.S. Army uniform.
Clinton's order changed that.

Realuyo became a U.S. citizen in 1981 and was
treated at U.S. veterans hospitals until his death April 25. Shortly before
he died, the Philippines ambassador came to his hospital room on the 61st
anniversary of the death march to honor him.

"He opened his eyes and smiled a little bit,"
recalled Realuyo's sister, Amelia.

"I'm not asking for a special favor," Pompeo
said. "My brother has already paid his dues."